Calgary Herald

NEARLY 13 YEARS AFTER SHE ALLEGEDLY ARRANGED THE ELABORATE CONTRACT KILLING OF HER MILLIONAIR­E CANADIAN HUSBAND, A FORMER BEAUTY QUEEN IS FINALLY SET TO STAND TRIAL IN PUERTO RICO.

Winnipeg millionair­e killed in Puerto Rico

- TrisTin Hopper

Nearly 13 years after she allegedly arranged the elaborate contract killing of her millionair­e Canadian husband, former beauty queen Aurea Vazquez Rijos is finally set to stand trial in Puerto Rico.

It’s the culminatio­n of an obsessive quest for justice by the family of murdered Winnipeg man Adam Anhang, including nearly five years of tracking Vazquez’s every movement as she led U.S. justice officials on an internatio­nal search.

“Whoever did this, did they ever think I wouldn’t come after them?” Anhang’s father Abe told an NBC Dateline documentar­y in 2008, just as the charges against Vazquez were made public.

But with Vasquez then an elusive fugitive in Europe, it would take another 10 years to get her inside an American courtroom.

Anhang was just 32 when he was stabbed and beaten to death on the cobbleston­ed streets of Old San Juan, Puerto Rico.

The CEO of a lucrative online gaming firm, Anhang had only recently moved to Puerto Rico with visions of establishi­ng the U.S. territory as a prime destinatio­n for Canadian snowbirds.

Vazquez was at Anhang’s side at the time of the attack, having arranged to meet him in the tourist-friendly district in order to discuss their impending divorce. Anhang’s last words to Vazquez, according to a Global News documentar­y, were “run, baby, run.”

Police charged a dishwasher from a nearby restaurant, Jonathan Roman, with the crime. Roman had no clear motive and no forensic evidence pointed to him as the suspect. And nothing had been stolen from Anhang.

Neverthele­ss, Roman matched witness descriptio­ns of a heavy-set attacker. In 2007, he was convicted of first degree murder and sentenced to 105 years in prison.

But Abe, a former Winnipeg lawyer, was simultaneo­usly mounting his own investigat­ion into the crime. He made the round-trip to Puerto Rico 23 times in the first two years after his son’s murder, changing hotel rooms every night.

He lobbied government officials, met with law enforcemen­t and carefully tracked his son’s final movements. Abe’s investigat­ions went so deep that he even reported receiving illicit offers to settle the matter with his own contract killings. “I’m going within the operation of their system, and trusting their system to provide justice,” Abe told the Winnipeg Free Press in 2007.

Abe learned of his son’s tempestuou­s seven-month marriage to Vazquez, which according to colleagues in Puerto Rico had been spurred by the former beauty queen falsely claiming to be pregnant. Abe, who had also been briefly married in his early 20s, kept the union hidden from friends.

“I did not know that they were married until he was murdered. He kept it to himself, even though we spoke after he married her, apparently,” one of Anhang’s former classmates, Yoav Leeran, told the National Post soon after the murder.

“My explanatio­n is I guess he understood the mistake he made the minute he made it.”

In his final days, Anhang had lived with deep fear of Vazquez’ possible connection­s to the underworld, even going so far as to employ a bodyguard. “I was worried because Adam told me several times that he was afraid for his life,” his former assistant Glorivil Rosario would say at the trial of Roman.

Most critically, Vazquez categorica­lly refused to assist Puerto Rican homicide investigat­ors. Twice, she failed to show up for police questionin­g in relation to the murder.

Six months after the murder, Vazquez filed suit against the Anhang family, demanding her share of Adam’s estate. In return, the Anhangs filed a $50 million civil suit against Vazquez claiming that she and members of her family has “conspired to assassinat­e” their son. “We firmly believe our son’s widow was herself intimately involved in our son’s murder, in concert with others,” Abe Anhang told the Winnipeg Free Press at the time.

At the time, Vazquez dismissed the charges as merely an attempt to block her from Anhang’s will. “She almost got killed herself,” Vazquez’s lawyer, Luis Rivera told the National Post in 2006.

But two years later, an FBI probe would similarly conclude that Anhang’s death had been a meticulous­ly planned murder-for-hire.

In a 2008 Grand Jury indictment, Vazquez was accused of promising $3 million to a hit man, Alex Pabon Colon, in exchange for her husband’s murder. Pabon, who is reportedly known as El Loco, has co-operated with investigat­ors.

Under the couple’s prenuptial agreement, Vazquez stood to receive a maximum of $360,000 in a divorce. As a widow, however, she could claim most or all of Anhang’s net worth, estimated to be in excess of $20 million.

“Alex stabbed Adam several times while Aurea watched,” reads a summary of the allegation­s from documents filed in U.S. District Court. “Aurea then instructed Alex to injure her in order to give the appearance that Adam’s murder was the result of a robbery gone wrong.”

The charges exonerated Roman, who had already spent eight months in a maximum-security prison.

By the time U.S. authoritie­s had issued a warrant for Vazquez’s arrest, she had fled to Italy, a country infamous for its tough extraditio­n laws. Settling in Florence, she dyed her hair brown and soon became pregnant with twin girls by an Italian man — although she lost custody of the children after Italian newspapers wrote about her story, dubbing her a Black Widow.

According to U.S. court documents, Vazquez also used forged documents to convince a Florentine Jewish organizati­on that she was of Jewish descent, thus allowing her to immigrate to Israel. She also spent this time under the near-constant surveillan­ce of a private eye hired by the Anhang family.

“She had access to three or four identity cards, she was using three or four different names, different hairstyles, different hair colourings,” Abe Anhang told a 2014 Global News documentar­y.

Vazquez’s time as a fugitive ended in 2013, when she was arrested in the Madrid airport, likely as the result of an FBI sting operation luring her outside Italy with promises of work as a tour guide. Even then, Spanish authoritie­s would not release Vazquez into U.S. custody until they had assurances that she would not face the death penalty or life imprisonme­nt without parole. Vazquez claimed she was the victim of “corrupt and Mafioso types.”

According to the BBC, during the extraditio­n hearings Vazquez had another baby, this time in a Spanish prison with a drug offender as the father. The child was turned over to Vazquez’s mother upon her return to Puerto Rico.

Jury selection begins Tuesday. Vazquez faces charges related to murder for hire and using a telephone for the purposes of conspiracy.

 ?? HANDOUT PHOTO: THE SAN JUAN STAR ?? Aurea Vazquez Rijos has been charged with planning her husband’s 2005 murder in Puerto Rico. Adam Anhang, 32, the son of prominent Winnipeg lawyer Abraham Anhang, was stabbed and beaten on a street in Old San Juan.
HANDOUT PHOTO: THE SAN JUAN STAR Aurea Vazquez Rijos has been charged with planning her husband’s 2005 murder in Puerto Rico. Adam Anhang, 32, the son of prominent Winnipeg lawyer Abraham Anhang, was stabbed and beaten on a street in Old San Juan.
 ??  ?? Adam Anhang
Adam Anhang

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